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The debug mode has been broken pretty much ever since it was shipped because it was possible to enable the debug mode in user code without actually enabling it in the dylib, leading to ODR violations that caused various kinds of failures. This commit makes the debug mode a knob that is configured when building the library and which can't be changed afterwards. This is less flexible for users, however it will actually work as intended and it will allow us, in the future, to add various kinds of checks that do not assume the same ABI as the normal library. Furthermore, this will make the debug mode more robust, which means that vendors might be more tempted to support it properly, which hasn't been the case with the current debug mode. This patch shouldn't break any user code, except folks who are building against a library that doesn't have the debug mode enabled and who try to enable the debug mode in their code. Such users will get a compile-time error explaining that this configuration isn't supported anymore. In the future, we should further increase the granularity of the debug mode checks so that we can cherry-pick which checks to enable, like we do for unspecified behavior randomization. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122941
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255 lines
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==============
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Testing libc++
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==============
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.. contents::
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:local:
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Getting Started
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===============
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libc++ uses LIT to configure and run its tests.
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The primary way to run the libc++ tests is by using ``make check-cxx``.
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However since libc++ can be used in any number of possible
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configurations it is important to customize the way LIT builds and runs
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the tests. This guide provides information on how to use LIT directly to
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test libc++.
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Please see the `Lit Command Guide`_ for more information about LIT.
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.. _LIT Command Guide: https://llvm.org/docs/CommandGuide/lit.html
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Usage
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-----
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After building libc++, you can run parts of the libc++ test suite by simply
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running ``llvm-lit`` on a specified test or directory. If you're unsure
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whether the required libraries have been built, you can use the
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`cxx-test-depends` target. For example:
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.. code-block:: bash
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$ cd <monorepo-root>
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$ make -C <build> cxx-test-depends # If you want to make sure the targets get rebuilt
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$ <build>/bin/llvm-lit -sv libcxx/test/std/re # Run all of the std::regex tests
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$ <build>/bin/llvm-lit -sv libcxx/test/std/depr/depr.c.headers/stdlib_h.pass.cpp # Run a single test
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$ <build>/bin/llvm-lit -sv libcxx/test/std/atomics libcxx/test/std/threads # Test std::thread and std::atomic
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In the default configuration, the tests are built against headers that form a
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fake installation root of libc++. This installation root has to be updated when
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changes are made to the headers, so you should re-run the `cxx-test-depends`
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target before running the tests manually with `lit` when you make any sort of
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change, including to the headers.
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Sometimes you'll want to change the way LIT is running the tests. Custom options
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can be specified using the `--param=<name>=<val>` flag. The most common option
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you'll want to change is the standard dialect (ie -std=c++XX). By default the
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test suite will select the newest C++ dialect supported by the compiler and use
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that. However if you want to manually specify the option like so:
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.. code-block:: bash
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$ <build>/bin/llvm-lit -sv libcxx/test/std/containers # Run the tests with the newest -std
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$ <build>/bin/llvm-lit -sv libcxx/test/std/containers --param=std=c++03 # Run the tests in C++03
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Occasionally you'll want to add extra compile or link flags when testing.
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You can do this as follows:
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.. code-block:: bash
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$ <build>/bin/llvm-lit -sv libcxx/test --param=compile_flags='-Wcustom-warning'
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$ <build>/bin/llvm-lit -sv libcxx/test --param=link_flags='-L/custom/library/path'
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Some other common examples include:
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.. code-block:: bash
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# Specify a custom compiler.
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$ <build>/bin/llvm-lit -sv libcxx/test/std --param=cxx_under_test=/opt/bin/g++
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# Disable warnings in the test suite
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$ <build>/bin/llvm-lit -sv libcxx/test --param=enable_warnings=False
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# Use UBSAN when running the tests.
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$ <build>/bin/llvm-lit -sv libcxx/test --param=use_sanitizer=Undefined
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Using a custom site configuration
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---------------------------------
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By default, the libc++ test suite will use a site configuration that matches
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the current CMake configuration. It does so by generating a ``lit.site.cfg``
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file in the build directory from one of the configuration file templates in
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``libcxx/test/configs/``, and pointing ``llvm-lit`` (which is a wrapper around
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``llvm/utils/lit/lit.py``) to that file. So when you're running
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``<build>/bin/llvm-lit``, the generated ``lit.site.cfg`` file is always loaded
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instead of ``libcxx/test/lit.cfg.py``. If you want to use a custom site
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configuration, simply point the CMake build to it using
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``-DLIBCXX_TEST_CONFIG=<path-to-site-config>``, and that site configuration
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will be used instead. That file can use CMake variables inside it to make
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configuration easier.
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.. code-block:: bash
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$ cmake <options> -DLIBCXX_TEST_CONFIG=<path-to-site-config>
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$ make -C <build> cxx-test-depends
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$ <build>/bin/llvm-lit -sv libcxx/test # will use your custom config file
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LIT Options
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===========
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:program:`lit` [*options*...] [*filenames*...]
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Command Line Options
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--------------------
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To use these options you pass them on the LIT command line as ``--param NAME``
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or ``--param NAME=VALUE``. Some options have default values specified during
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CMake's configuration. Passing the option on the command line will override the
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default.
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.. program:: lit
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.. option:: cxx_under_test=<path/to/compiler>
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Specify the compiler used to build the tests.
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.. option:: stdlib=<stdlib name>
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**Values**: libc++, libstdc++, msvc
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Specify the C++ standard library being tested. The default is libc++ if this
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option is not provided. This option is intended to allow running the libc++
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test suite against other standard library implementations.
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.. option:: std=<standard version>
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**Values**: c++03, c++11, c++14, c++17, c++20, c++2b
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Change the standard version used when building the tests.
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.. option:: cxx_headers=<path/to/headers>
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Specify the c++ standard library headers that are tested. By default the
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headers in the source tree are used.
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.. option:: cxx_library_root=<path/to/lib/>
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Specify the directory of the libc++ library to be tested. By default the
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library folder of the build directory is used.
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.. option:: cxx_runtime_root=<path/to/lib/>
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Specify the directory of the libc++ library to use at runtime. This directory
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is not added to the linkers search path. This can be used to compile tests
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against one version of libc++ and run them using another. The default value
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for this option is `cxx_library_root`.
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.. option:: use_system_cxx_lib=<bool>
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**Default**: False
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Enable or disable testing against the installed version of libc++ library.
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This impacts whether the ``use_system_cxx_lib`` Lit feature is defined or
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not. The ``cxx_library_root`` and ``cxx_runtime_root`` parameters should
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still be used to specify the path of the library to link to and run against,
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respectively.
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.. option:: use_sanitizer=<sanitizer name>
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**Values**: Memory, MemoryWithOrigins, Address, Undefined
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Run the tests using the given sanitizer. If LLVM_USE_SANITIZER was given when
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building libc++ then that sanitizer will be used by default.
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.. option:: llvm_unwinder
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Enable the use of LLVM unwinder instead of libgcc.
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.. option:: builtins_library
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Path to the builtins library to use instead of libgcc.
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Writing Tests
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-------------
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When writing tests for the libc++ test suite, you should follow a few guidelines.
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This will ensure that your tests can run on a wide variety of hardware and under
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a wide variety of configurations. We have several unusual configurations such as
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building the tests on one host but running them on a different host, which add a
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few requirements to the test suite. Here's some stuff you should know:
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- All tests are run in a temporary directory that is unique to that test and
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cleaned up after the test is done.
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- When a test needs data files as inputs, these data files can be saved in the
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repository (when reasonable) and referenced by the test as
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``// FILE_DEPENDENCIES: <path-to-dependencies>``. Copies of these files or
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directories will be made available to the test in the temporary directory
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where it is run.
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- You should never hardcode a path from the build-host in a test, because that
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path will not necessarily be available on the host where the tests are run.
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- You should try to reduce the runtime dependencies of each test to the minimum.
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For example, requiring Python to run a test is bad, since Python is not
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necessarily available on all devices we may want to run the tests on (even
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though supporting Python is probably trivial for the build-host).
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Benchmarks
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==========
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Libc++ contains benchmark tests separately from the test of the test suite.
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The benchmarks are written using the `Google Benchmark`_ library, a copy of which
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is stored in the libc++ repository.
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For more information about using the Google Benchmark library see the
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`official documentation <https://github.com/google/benchmark>`_.
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.. _`Google Benchmark`: https://github.com/google/benchmark
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Building Benchmarks
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-------------------
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The benchmark tests are not built by default. The benchmarks can be built using
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the ``cxx-benchmarks`` target.
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An example build would look like:
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.. code-block:: bash
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$ cd build
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$ ninja cxx-benchmarks
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This will build all of the benchmarks under ``<libcxx-src>/benchmarks`` to be
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built against the just-built libc++. The compiled tests are output into
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``build/projects/libcxx/benchmarks``.
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The benchmarks can also be built against the platforms native standard library
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using the ``-DLIBCXX_BUILD_BENCHMARKS_NATIVE_STDLIB=ON`` CMake option. This
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is useful for comparing the performance of libc++ to other standard libraries.
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The compiled benchmarks are named ``<test>.libcxx.out`` if they test libc++ and
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``<test>.native.out`` otherwise.
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Also See:
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* :ref:`Building Libc++ <build instructions>`
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* :ref:`CMake Options`
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Running Benchmarks
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------------------
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The benchmarks must be run manually by the user. Currently there is no way
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to run them as part of the build.
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For example:
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.. code-block:: bash
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$ cd build/projects/libcxx/benchmarks
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$ ./algorithms.libcxx.out # Runs all the benchmarks
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$ ./algorithms.libcxx.out --benchmark_filter=BM_Sort.* # Only runs the sort benchmarks
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For more information about running benchmarks see `Google Benchmark`_.
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